Wow. That makes a very elaborate and elegant Easter Egg for those in the HAND camp this week. And it even provides a reason for WRIST to be the alternate answer! I think I see a rabbit hole nomination in the offing here.MikeyG wrote: Mon Jan 20, 2025 12:07 am My notepad app suffered through this - now you can too!
Thursday:
1. Tight Spots - 1-syllable part of the body
2. I thought this was going to be a "Zip in, Zip Out" with the themer: HOSPITAL CORNERS. Surely ER would be involved?
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13. "H" and "L" are the "corners" of the word HOSPITAL. Maybe that has something to do with it, who knows. (HIGH and LOW?)
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17. Well, we had a breakthrough last night after about 1:45 more - but the breakthrough did not give us the answer right away.
The only instance of the letter "H" is in the upper quadrant of the grid, five times. Any time we have something like that, that makes the constrained fill make a bit more sense (I would've preferred OTOH instead of OSSA to get rid of LAIS, but that adds the "H," so that takes care of that. Of course, you'd think ENARBOR and RETROVERT still could be something else.)
So, that's the beginning but not the end. It does help answer Q1, and we assume that ER/OR is a dead end for the time being. (Q3 and the 2-by-2 squares are still up in the air.)
18. But, the next step is, "How is that relevant? What does that give us?"
My initial thought last night was to let the "H"s be markers and "move" that part of the grid to various other parts. Nothing really developed - taking symmetric letters on a 180-degree rotation (but how is that related to "tight spot") gives us LEUSD, which is nothing.
19. And, obviously, it isn't just that there are a set number of Hs; it's the fact that they are very specifically lodged in the upper-left quadrant. Why? Why would that be necessary instead of having just five random Hs scattered through the grid? (Or in a set of themers?)
And even if we look at the "corners" of the "H"s, again, that wouldn't necessitate them being clustered in the NW.
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21. I mean...the "H"s look like the five fingers of a HAND? With W being the wrist? There is only one "W" in the grid as well. That...can't be it, can it?
It's clever, but is there a reason that had to be relegated to the upper quadrant? That really makes me doubt it and almost implies that 75% of the grid is doing nothing, other than not providing any "H"s.
So, we'd guess HAND now, and people were talking about there possibly being two answers, so I'd guess WRIST was the other (and the one-syllable might be there to negate FINGER).
Is this really it? I would like a bit more of a click, but if something else were relevant, I'd like to think it'd've come out in the wash by now.
HAND [4:18.32]
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Mikey G
I was in the WRIST camp. As soon as I saw HOSPITAL CORNERS, I was lucky to spot WHERET in the corners on the first row as I was completing the grid. So I kept my eye out for other potential corners as I filled the grid.
From the "easy for the non-constructor to say" department, I thought the word HOSPITAL in the long theme entry did more harm than good and I think that CORNERS alone would have been a more direct hint. Clued as something like "Puts into a tight spot". The only purpose I can see for including HOSPITAL is to give a medical/anatomical twist to the puzzle so that the answer ties into the metanism. Because as @Joe Ross points out, hospital corners are only at the foot of the bed... oh, hey! FOOT would have been a pretty cool answer had that been possible to finagle.
Oh and BTW my own left ulna - and its pal radius - are bionic as of this summer. A literal crash course in anatomy for me: